Page 204 - tess-of-the-durbervilles
P. 204

‘We must overhaul that mead,’ he resumed; ‘this mustn’t
         continny!’
            All having armed themselves with old pointed knives,
         they went out together. As the inimical plant could only be
         present  in  very  microscopic  dimensions  to  have  escaped
         ordinary observation, to find it seemed rather a hopeless
         attempt in the stretch of rich grass before them. Howev-
         er,  they  formed  themselves  into  line,  all  assisting,  owing
         to the importance of the search; the dairyman at the up-
         per end with Mr Clare, who had volunteered to help; then
         Tess, Marian, Izz Huett, and Retty; then Bill Lewell, Jona-
         than, and the married dairywomen—Beck Knibbs, with her
         wooly black hair and rolling eyes; and flaxen Frances, con-
         sumptive from the winter damps of the water-meads—who
         lived in their respective cottages.
            With eyes fixed upon the ground they crept slowly across
         a strip of the field, returning a little further down in such a
         manner that, when they should have finished, not a single
         inch of the pasture but would have fallen under the eye of
         some one of them. It was a most tedious business, not more
         than half a dozen shoots of garlic being discoverable in the
         whole field; yet such was the herb’s pungency that probably
         one bite of it by one cow had been sufficient to season the
         whole dairy’s produce for the day.
            Differing  one  from  another  in  natures  and  moods  so
         greatly as they did, they yet formed, bending, a curiously
         uniform row—automatic, noiseless; and an alien observer
         passing down the neighbouring lane might well have been
         excused for massing them as ‘Hodge”. As they crept along,

         204                             Tess of the d’Urbervilles
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